Youssef Jira, a fresh-faced 18-year-old Libyan in a hoodie, has big ambitions in a society where youthful creativity has long been sacrificed to dictatorship and violence, according to AFP.
He wants to encourage other young people to use hi-tech to help modernize the divided, and conflict-scarred country.
Jira, with a bandana around his head, is part of a group of young tech fanatics who took part in a robotics competition in a Tripoli suburb this month. “We want to send a message to the whole of society, because what we’ve learned has changed us a lot,” Jira said at the rare event.
Libya has seen more than a decade of stop-start conflict since a 2011 NATO-backed revolt toppled late long-time leader Muammar Gaddafi. A myriad of rival militias, foreign powers, and multiple governments continue to vie for influence and power. The country remains split between an expired interim government in Tripoli, and a rival administration in the east.
Unlike Libya’s politicians, the young participants worked together at the school gymnasium where the competition took place. Jira said he gained new skills, and learned about teamwork in pursuit of a common goal.
The event had the air of a high school sports competition, with fans cheering on their teams who worked in a pen on the gym floor, against a backdrop of banners promoting “Lybotics” and the “First Tech Challenge” as English pop music played. The robots were nothing fancy: small wheeled contraptions, their electrical guts exposed. They made jerky movements as they manoeuvred around the pen. But event coordinator, Mohammed Zayed said such projects help “open new horizons” for young Libyans.
“This is not just about simple robots,” he said. “These young people also had to manage their relationships and work towards inclusion, unity, and peace.” Zayed said the event aimed to “prepare the workers of the future and make the country aware of the importance of technology and innovation”.
Under Gaddafi’s 42-year rule, education and youth development were not a priority, and universities emphasized the leader’s views on politics, the military, and economics. After years of violence, a period of relative calm since a 2020 ceasefire has allowed some to dream that Libya can start moving forward, despite the ongoing political split. At the competition, family, friends, and even government officials joined the effort to promote tech culture and the start-up spirit, particularly among youth. The event, funded by an international school and private sponsors, had been envisaged since 2018 but repeatedly delayed because of unrest, and the COVID-19 pandemic. Around 20 teams competed, many of them with members of groups often marginalized in Libya’s conservative society: women, migrants, and the disabled.
Shadrawan Khalfallah, 17, a member of an all-girls team, said she believed technology could help address challenges from climate to health, but also help women get ahead.
“We set up our team to make our society evolve and show that we exist,” she said, handing out stickers bearing the word “Change”. Libya is rich in oil, but decades of stagnation under Gaddafi and years of fighting have shattered its corruption-plagued economy and left its population mired in poverty. Little public money goes into science and technology, but Nagwa Al-Ghani, a science teacher and mentor to one of the teams, said this needs to change and could help give Libya “a better image”.
“We need it if we want our country to develop,” she said, adding that education is the starting point. They face numerous challenges, but authorities in Tripoli talk of “new initiatives” for digital development, with a focus on young people. “Libya lacks nothing, neither human resources, nor intelligence, nor the determination of the youth,” government spokesman Mohammed Hamouda told AFP at the event. “What’s missing is long-term stability, and a strategic vision to support young